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(2)
K-3
Illustrated by
Eric Velasquez.
Victor Hugo Green (1892–1960) was a mail carrier whose work took him all across New Jersey. Though well-loved on his routes, Green knew the danger he faced as a Black man anytime he went somewhere unfamiliar. This prompted the energetic Green, who "had great get-up-and-go," to create a guide for Black people to find safe places to stop, eat, and stay when road-tripping on the nation's newly built highways and turnpikes. Called the Green Book, this handbook grew from "just a pamphlet" listing welcoming places in the New York City area in 1936, to a 1940 edition featuring amenities in large cities in every state plus Washington, DC, and standing as a useful--and possibly life-saving--tool for Black travelers well into the 1960s. Velasquez's scrapbook-style, painterly vignettes capture period detail and nimbly complement Bolden's conversational free-verse text ("These travelers, / whether going places with smiles / or with tears in their eyes, / could face / hassles, humiliation, hardships"). Back matter includes a timeline, source notes, and selected sources.
Reviewer: Sam Bloom
| Horn Book Magazine Issue:
September, 2022
279 pp.
| Scholastic/Chicken House
| August, 2015
|
TradeISBN 978-0-545-82960-1$17.99
|
EbookISBN 978-0-545-83057-7
(3)
YA
Fletcher brings front-and-center a minor player in Victor Hugo's Les Misérables: Eponine, the Parisian street girl who takes a bullet meant for Marius, the true love of Jean Valjean's ward, Cosette. Sensory details and rich prose vividly reveal setting and character, as Eponine fights to overcome her wretched, sordid upbringing in order to do good.